🪩 Lifestyle🧱 Compound word😏 Mocking Sensitive
Spiciness
NK

🩲빨래귀신

/ppal-lae-gwi-sin/

A North Korean slang term for a petty thief who steals laundry items such as underwear, socks, or clothes left out to dry.
빨래귀신 meaning visual explanation
👥 Offline culture🚶 OfflineFirst seen 1990

origin · Source

The word combines ‘laundry’ with ‘ghost’ to describe someone who seems to make hanging clothes disappear. It reflects everyday survival slang in North Korean communities, where small thefts of practical items like socks or underwear could become a subject of dark humor.

ex)

2
  • "Don’t leave your socks outside too long. A ‘laundry ghost’ might take them."
  • "People joked that a laundry ghost had visited after the underwear disappeared overnight."

Related words you'll enjoy

ex)

"Be careful in the crowd; people say pickpockets show up there."

👥 Offline culture🚶 Offline2000

originThe word appears in lists of North Korean everyday slang as a term equivalent to ‘쓰리꾼,’ a Korean slang word for a pickpocket. Because it describes theft, it is best handled as a social-context word rather than a playful meme.

ex)

"During the famine years, many children around stations and markets were called kkotjebi."

👥 Offline culture🚶 Offline1995

originThe term became widely known during North Korea’s severe food crisis in the 1990s, when many displaced children and poor people survived around train stations and markets. Its origin is often linked to a Russian word for wanderers or nomads, but the exact path into everyday Korean usage is not fully certain.

ex)

"You should knock first before going in."

📻 North Korean media📻 North Korean state media2000

originThe word combines ‘hand’ and ‘sign/presence,’ replacing the loanword ‘knock’ with a descriptive Korean-style expression. It may sound unfamiliar to South Koreans, but once understood, it feels surprisingly literal—making it a neat example of everyday vocabulary differences between North and South Korea.

ex)

"No bus today, so I guess I’m taking the number 11 vehicle."

👥 Offline culture🚶 Offline1990

originThe term is listed in South Korea’s Ministry of Unification North Korea slang resources as meaning ‘two legs.’ It is understood as a humorous everyday metaphor in North Korean speech, especially when walking replaces scarce or inconvenient transportation.